Friday, July 2, 2021

On This Day...An Affair To Remember (1957)

Cary Grant's 62nd film was An Affair to Remember and released on today's date back in 1957. 

Summary: 

The suave, cosmopolitan and first-rate philanderer, Nickie Ferrante (Cary Grant), has finally decided to settle down. Sailing from Europe to New York to reunite with his lovely celebrity fiancée, Miss Lois Clarke, and her enviable inheritance, the great seducer crosses paths with the charming professional singer, Terry McKay (Deborah Kerr), who is returning to her lover. Despite both being engaged to others, the two transatlantic commuters will laugh, tease each other, and flirt--and by the time they reach New York City's Port, the clandestine couple will have fallen madly in love. Now an unforeseen and troubling dilemma burdens Nickie and Terry, only a sincere promise and a face-to-face meeting atop the iconic Empire State Building in six months' time can seal their bond. Still, is this love meant to be?


Cast:

Cary Grant...Nickie Ferrante
Deborah Kerr...Terry McKay
Richard Denning...Kenneth Bradley
Neva Patterson...Lois Clark
Cathleen Nesbitt...Grandmother Janou
Robert Q. Lewis...Self - Announcer
Charles Watts...Ned Hathaway
Fortunio Bonanova...Courbet




Did You Know?

The 53-year-old Cary Grant was only 15 years younger than Cathleen Nesbitt, who played his grandmother.

Deborah Kerr and Cary Grant improvised many of their scenes throughout filming, and a number of lines that made it to the final cut of the film came from the actors' improvisation.

Nickie and Terry make their conditional promise to meet in six months at exactly the halfway point of the film (59-1/2 minutes into the 119-minute movie).

After the confrontation with the photographer on the ship's deck, Deborah Kerr turns to Cary Grant and says, "So, I go my way [traces a straight path by her hand] and you go yours [traces a twisty path with the wave of her hand]." The same exchange takes place between Irene Dunne and Cary Grant in The Awful Truth (1937), where she says, "As we go down the life's highway, you go in your way [traces a twisty path with the wave of her hand] and I go in my way [traces a straight path]."

Deborah Kerr's character was previously played by Irene Dunne in Love Affair (1939), of which this film is a remake. Both were directed by Leo McCarey. The year before this film was made, Kerr played Anna Leonowens in The King and I (1956), also a role that had previously been played by Irene Dunne in the black-and-white classic Anna and the King of Siam (1946). "The King and I" is a musical based on the same book.

The film was shot mostly in Hollywood, though there were location shoots in New York City and the South of France. When Cathleen Nesbitt's friends asked if she had enjoyed filming her scene as Cary Grant's grandmother in France, she had to inform them that the interior scenes had been done on the 20th-Century-Fox back lot.

During filming cinematographer Milton R. Krasner pointed out to Cary Grant that a lump on his forehead was making it hard to film his close-ups. The lump was the result of a childhood accident, but Grant had been habitually rubbing it for years, leading it to swell. Doctors told him it would take four to six weeks for him to recover from its removal. Instead, he took a few days off, had his wife, Betsy Drake, hypnotize him, and had the procedure performed in the doctor's office under a local anesthetic. He recovered within days with no scarring.

To help promote the film, Cary Grant did a product endorsement, something he had tried to avoid for years. In this case, however, he was being honest. The ad was for TWA, his airline of choice.

Ingrid Bergman was the first choice to play Terry McKay. Doris Day was also considered before Deborah Kerr was cast.

This film was referenced in the movie 'Sleepless in Seattle'. Rita Wilson's character explains the story to Tom Hanks and breaks down in tears doing so.




Quotes:

Terry McKay: What makes life so difficult?
Nickie Ferrante: People?


Grandmother Janou: [talking about Nickie] Everything comes too easily to him. He's always attracted by the art he isn't practising, the place he hasn't been, the girl he hasn't met.


Interviewer: I'm sure you had some wonderful experiences in Europe.
Nickie Ferrante: Yes.
Interviewer: Would you care to expand on that statement?
Nickie Ferrante: No.


Terry McKay: My father drank beer. In the morning.
Nickie Ferrante: He was a beer drinker?
Terry McKay: Later in the day, he drank anything.


Terry McKay: We were talking about the place where I was born...
Nickie Ferrante: I can hardly wait for you to grow up.


Terry McKay: Winter must be cold for those with no warm memories... we've already missed the spring!


Lobby Cards:





Directed by Leo McCarey.
Distributed by 20th Century Fox.
Running time: 114 minutes.



Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36.


Thursday, July 1, 2021

On This Day...Night and Day (1946)

Back in 1946 on today's date Cary Grant's 48th full length film was released...Night and Day!


Summary:

A fictionalized biopic of composer Cole Porter (Cary Grant) from his days at Yale in the 1910s through the height of his success to the 1940s.


Cast:

Cary Grant ... Cole Porter
Alexis Smith ... Linda Lee Porter
Monty Woolley ... Monty
Ginny Simms ... Carole Hill
Jane Wyman ... Gracie Harris
Eve Arden ... Gabrielle
Victor Francen ... Anatole Giro
Alan Hale ... Leon Dowling
Dorothy Malone ... Nancy
Tom D'Andrea ... Tommy
Selena Royle ... Kate Porter
Donald Woods ... Ward Blackburn
Henry Stephenson ... Omar Cole
Paul Cavanagh ... Bart McClelland
Sig Ruman ... Wilowski



Did You Know?

When the studio asked Cole Porter who he might like to play him in the movie, Porter suggested Cary Grant as a joke. He thought Grant was about as far from himself as you could get. The studio went out and signed Grant to play the role.


First Cary Grant film in color.

In addition to rewriting all issues pertaining to the sexual orientation of Cole Porter and Monty Woolley, the film takes substantial liberties in terms of the timing of career events in the lives of its characters, some of which occurred only a year or two earlier (i.e. the release date of the film version of The Man Who Came to Dinner [1942]) and might have been fresh in audiences' memories.

The lack of musical performers on the Warner Bros. roster led to the studio putting some of its non-singing contract players, including Eve Arden, Jane Wyman and Dorothy Malone, to work in song-and-dance numbers. The only performer who doesn't sing is Alexis Smith, who, ironically, would become a Tony Award-winning musical theatre star decades later as the star of Broadway's "Follies" and "Platinum."

Cary Grant performs his own vocals in this film.


Quotes:

Cole Porter: Thanks for all the flowers.
Monty Woolley: Yes, one can only send them to a man when he's flat on his back.


Monty Woolley: Haven't you ever wanted to be alone?
Gracie Harris: Yes, but with somebody.

Lobby Cards:



Directed by Michael Curtiz.
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Running time: 132 minutes.


Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36.

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

On This Day...Mr. Lucky (1943)

 Released today back in 1943, Mr. Lucky was Cary Grant's 43rd full length feature film


Summary:

Joe Adams (Cary Grant) takes on the identity of a dead gangster in order to avoid the draft. Adams plans to use a war relief charity to get his gambling operation up and running, until he falls in love with Dorothy Bryant (Laraine Day) and has a change of heart.


Cast:

Cary Grant ... Joe Adams posing as Joe Bascopolous
Laraine Day ... Dorothy Bryant
Charles Bickford ... Hard Swede
Gladys Cooper ... Captain Veronica Steadman
Alan Carney... Crunk
Henry Stephenson... Mr. Bryant
Paul Stewart... Zepp
Kay Johnson... Mrs. Mary Ostrander
Erford Gage... Henchman
Walter Kingsford... Commissioner Hargraves
Florence Bates... Mrs. Van Every


Did You Know?

RKO's second biggest hit of 1943, netting $1.603 million, it was only outperformed at the box office by the vastly lower-budgeted Hitler's Children (1943).


The rhyming slang used by Cary Grant's character is a form of slang in which a word is replaced by a rhyming word, typically the second word of a two-word phrase (so stairs becomes "apples and pears"). The second word is then often dropped entirely ("I'm going up the apples"), meaning that the association of the original word to the rhyming phrase is not obvious to the uninitiated. For example: "Sherman" for an American (Sherman tank = Yank). The exact origin of rhyming slang appears to be unclear, partly because it exists to some extent in many languages. In English, rhyming slang is strongly associated with Cockney speech from the East End of London.


Quotes:


Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: [to Crunk] Never give a sucker an even break and always keep an eye on your pals.


Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Now watch this.
[rolls dice]
Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Seven.
Captain Veronica Steadman: How do you do it?
Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Influence. You bring me the right people, I'll get you that hundred thousand.
Captain Veronica Steadman: But it's gambling!
Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Not the way I do it.



Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Well, now this is quite a surprise!
Dorothy Bryant: Not particularly. It so happens I rather expected it. And if you think your persistence is going to have any effect on me, you're mistaken.
Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Well, I can't see how you people can pass up $80,000 for the cause.
Dorothy Bryant: For whose cause? If you're so interested in serving your cause, why don't you join the Army?
Blood Bank Nurse: Next, please!
Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Oh...
[produces draft card]
Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: 4F.
Dorothy Bryant: You look 1A to me.
Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Hey, you don't look too bad yourself!
[He chuckle, she stares, he lets out awkward groan]
Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Well, it's my arteries.
Blood Bank Nurse: Right this way...
Dorothy Bryant: Well, should you be giving blood?
Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous: Oh, well... my blood's 1A, just my arteries are 4F.



Lobby Cards:



Directed by H.C. Potter.
Distributed by R.K.O Radio.
Running time: 100 minutes.


Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36.


Saturday, June 26, 2021

On This Day...The American Citizen (1942)

 On this day, 26th June 1942, Archie Leach not only became Cary Grant, officially, but also became an American Citizen.



Newspaper clipping reporting the event.


U.S Citizenship and Immigration Services documentation.




Still a British Citizen and still Archie Leach at age 37!!



First Passport stamped 1946!



This passport shows travel in the 1960's.




Issued in 1965.



Issued in 1975 and expired in 1980.

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

On This Day... Gambling Ship (1933)

On 23 June 1933, Cary Grant's 11th full length film, Gambling Ship, was released.


Summary:

Tired of the dangerous life as gambling boss, Ace Corbin (Cary Grant) 'retires' from the racket and travels cross-country by train to begin a new life with a new name. 


On the train, he meets Eleanor (Benita Hume) and they fall in love. Ace's old life and Eleanor's deceptions collide with the typical results. But will love conquer all?



Cast:

Cary Grant... Ace Corbin
Benita Hume... Eleanor La Velle
Jack La Rue... Pete Manning
Glenda Farrell... Jeanne Sands
Roscoe Karns... Blooey
Arthur Vinton... Joe Burke
Charles Williams... Baby Face
Edwin Maxwell... D.A
Spencer Charters... Detective

Did You Know?

It was based on Paul Cain's short stories: 'Fast One', 'Lead Party', 'Velvet' and 'The Heat', which were published in Black Mask magazine.

A technical advisor was used to familiarize the actors in the film with the details of the parlance, activities, and manners of the gambling world. To maintain his anonymity he was known only as 
'Mr. 100'.

Carole Lombard was considered for the role of Eleanor La Velle.

After an African American boot-black called Oscar, who worked on the Paramount lot, was cast in a bit part, a black cinema in Los Angeles billed this movie as: "Sensational star in Gambling Ship, Oscar supported by Cary Grant." All the promo pictures outside the cinema were of Oscar.


Also Known As:

(original title)        Gambling Ship
Brazil                     Cassino Flutuante
Canada                  (English title)Gambling Ship
Japan                     (Japanese title)海の密室
Mexico                  Casino del mar
Portugal                 OCasino do Mar
Spain                     Casino del mar
Sweden                 Hasardskeppet
UK                        Gambling Ship



Lobby Cards:




Directed by Louis Gasnier and Max Marcin.
Produced and distributed by Paramount Publix.
Running time: 72 minutes.



Artwork by Rebekah Hawley of Studio 36.


Saturday, June 19, 2021

On This Day...Dream Wife (1953)

Today in 1953 saw the release of Cary Grant's 59th full length film, Dream Wife...which I first reviewed in my blog post on June 19, 2020. 

Summary:

A business tycoon decides to wed a Middle Eastern princess whose customs dictate the pair must live apart for several months before marrying; even more complications settle in when the tycoon's ex-fiancée is assigned to chaperone the pair.



Cast:

Cary Grant... Clemson Reade
Deborah Kerr... Effie
Walter Pidgeon...Walter McBride
Betta St. John... Tarji
Eduard Franz... Khan of Bukistan
Buddy Baer... Vizier
Les Tremayne... Ken Landwell
Donald Randolph... Ali
Bruce Bennett... Charlie Elkwood
Richard Anderson... Henry Malvine
Dan Tobin... Mr Brown
Movita... Rima
Gloria Holden... Mrs Jean Landwell
June Clayworth... Mrs May Elkwood
Dean Miller... George
Steve Forrest... Louis
Jonathan Cott... Marine
Patricia Tiernan... Pat

Did You Know?

After making this film Cary Grant announced his retirement from acting in February 1953. However, 18 months later he agreed to return to acting in To Catch a Thief (1955).

According to the AFI Catalog entry for this film, this is the first picture directed and produced by Sidney Sheldon, although he is uncredited in the producer role.


Eduard Franz as "Khan of Bukistan" is speaking gibberish as an English "translation" scrolls across the bottom of the screen at the beginning of the film.

First credited feature film role for Betta St. John.



Quotes:


Clemson Reade: We haven't been able to make a definite plan since we met.
Effie: Well, we went to Vermont for two weeks.
Clemson Reade: Yes. Yes, that's right. To her grandfather's farm. For two wonderful relaxing weeks in glorious Vermont.
Walter McBride: Tim'll be there in September.
Clemson Reade: We spent *one* day there. She had to leave to take care of the crisis in Sahara; some of the sand was missing.
Effie: Well, you stayed on.
Clemson Reade: With grandfather. It wasn't the same thing.


Effie: Clem...
Clemson Reade: [softly] What?
Effie: I am afraid that we'll have to postpone the wedding till after the oil deal is signed.
Clemson Reade: [alarmed] What?
Effie: I don't see any other way. Truly I don't. There are so many things to get done. Meetings, conferences, reports, and all of them so urgent.
Clemson Reade: So is our wedding.
Effie: But I mean *really* urgent.




Mr. Brown: Mr Reade...
Clemson Reade: Oh, good evening.
Clemson Reade: I've been waiting to talk with you.
Mr. Brown: Really? Anything wrong?
Mr. Brown: Yes. It's about that, er, bearded gentleman.
Clemson Reade: You mean our friendly skyscraper?
Mr. Brown: He's been trying to buy our chambermaids!
Clemson Reade: He has?
Mr. Brown: Yes. He's been offering them positions in the Khan's harem.
Clemson Reade: I hope he hasn't offended them.
Mr. Brown: Offended them? Six of the girls have already accepted.


Clemson Reade: Oh, I didn't mean that. What you are doing *is* important.
Effie: But not as important as cooking your breakfast. You don't need me for that. You can buy it for a dollar an hour. We've been emancipated, Mr. Reade. Have you heard of Susan B. Anthony?
Clemson Reade: Can she cook?


Clemson Reade: [as they walk toward the altar for their wedding] What can you expect from a woman? You're weak, helpless, and nothing but trouble. And that goes for all of you. Harriet Beecher Stowe. She wrote about slaves, didn't she? Well, it sure takes one to know one.
Tarji: She great woman. She write Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Clemson Reade: Susan B. Anthony...
Tarji: Susan B. Anthony fight for woman's vote. And that not all. Carry Country...
Clemson Reade: Carry Nation!
Tarji: Carry Nation.


Lobby Cards:





Directed by Sidney Sheldon
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Running time: 98 minutes.



Artwork by Rebekah Hawley of Studio 36.